She gave me 1 started plant. It's approx 1 ft tall. It's a feminized autobud.
Very cool
Yes....depending on the quality of your soil. I have zero issue with you digging up a spot, removing all weeds and roots and adding in a bag of miracle grow outdoor grow soil....which is balanced and won't burn your plant.
Now... if your through with heavy frost.
You can become very detailed in your mixing of fertilizers. There is a growth period and budding period that require different nutrients. But a general lite mix of 10-10-10 .... better yet 5-5-5 ... (i worry about burning with direct mixing of fertilizers) through out the season if you think you need to. A good outdoor grow soil for like raised beds does just fine.
It will be outdoors? Just how susceptible to wind,
Usually not a problem. They can get heavy with bud later in the year and the wind can bend them over, snapping them which pisses me off, but usually not a problem.
Some strains can be. Generally not a problem. I kill any genetics that give me mold problems because there are strains that have very little issue. The ones that do have mold problems I don't want to deal with.
They are not the tastiest plant out there but pest can be a problem at different times. I've never had an insect problem. Early in the season everything likes a sprout so....protect them with fencing if you have a rabbit problem. After they adapt to the transplanting, they are fairly hearty...like any garden plant. If something bites off a part, and it happens, the plant recovers as long as it's not badly abused. Ather they are knee high, I rarely have problems unless there are droughts and the natural vegetation is limited. Droughts create a problem because I water them and then small animals like rabbits and chipmunks will chew the bark and that will kill them.
Keep it simple is not a bad way to go and depending on your soil...treat it like corn...and yeah tomatoes with thinking about the questions you had here.